How mitochondria produce reactive oxygen species
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Abstract
The production of ROS (reactive oxygen species) by mammalian mitochondria is important because it underlies oxidative damage in many pathologies and contributes to retrograde redox signalling from the organelle to the cytosol and nucleus. Superoxide (O2(*-)) is the proximal mitochondrial ROS, and in the present review I outline the principles that govern O2(*-) production within the matrix of mammalian mitochondria. The flux of O2(*-) is related to the concentration of potential electron donors, the local concentration of O2 and the second-order rate constants for the reactions between them. Two modes of operation by isolated mitochondria result in significant O2(*-) production, predominantly from complex I:…
Citation impact
7,975
total citations
- FWCI
- 67.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 139
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Mitochondrion
- NAD+ kinase
- Mitochondrial matrix
- Superoxide
- Reactive oxygen species
- Cytosol
- Oxidative phosphorylation
- Biochemistry
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